THEY
GAVE US MANY MEN OF THE CLOTH
by
Allan Douglas
From
the Weekly Scotsman, January 17, 1963
Among the best documented families of Scotland, Hannays were long
associated with Galloway, particularly with the lands of Sorbie in
Wigtownshire, not far from Scotland's "Cradle of
Christianity." Whithorn, where on Fynlas Ahanna was Canon in
1390.
That the family gave Scotland and the world many men of the church
is not without significance, although nothing is their early history
indicates an ecclesiastical origin.
The name of the Most Reverend Thomas Hannay is well known among
Scottish Episcopalians, the late Edward J. Hanna was Roman Catholic
Bishop of Los Angeles, and a branch of the clan in America has given
the Presbyterian Church no less than 33 clergymen!
Most accounts claim the family are of Pictish origin. Earliest on
record were Gilbert de Anneth and Gilbert de Hannethe. The two
spellings appeared in 1296 on the Ragman Roll of Lowland and Border
barons who swore fealty to England's Edward I at Berwick.
Hannays probably recognized Edward's nominee, John Baliol, as king
of Scotland; but later their allegiance was to the Stewarts.
Exactly when the lands of Sorbie became their home is unknown. But
so powerful were they in Wigtownshire, an entire district of that
county was once known as "Marchers Hannay" - from
"machair," Gaelic for grazing lands. Nowadays, this area is
call "The Machers."
Sorbie was their family seat from the reign of James IV, if not
before; and one Dougal Ahanna served as one of the king's falconers.
Odo Hannay is the first laird of Sorbie on record. He was succeeded
by his son, Robert Ahannay, in 1494. Alexander, a younger son of the
Sorbie laird in the year 1500 was a burgess of Wigtown who married a
daughter of Stewart of Garlies, ancestor of the Earls of Galloway, and
purchased the lands of Kirkdale in the Stewartry of Kirkcudbright.
From this family came the famous soldier-poet, Patrick Hannay,
author of "Two Elegies on the Death of Queen Anne" (London,
1619); "A Happy Husband" and "Songs and Sonnets"
(London, 1622). As a soldier of fortune, he reportedly fought in the
service of the Queen of Bohemia.
Among the poet's friends was a one John Marshall, himself a poet,
who referred to Hannay's grandfather as being "well known to the
English by his sword."
Much of the Sorbie land was lost in debts incurred in the early
1600s during a feud with Murray of Broughton. John, the last Sorbie
laird, revived the quarrel with his Broughton contemporary, only to
lose more of the estates. Upon John's death about 1640, Sorbie passed
to Stewart of Garlies and thence to the Earl of Galloway.
Hannays embraced almost every major Christian denomination; for
during the Reformation those in Galloway became ardent reformers. Some
were among the early Quakers.
About the time of the "Ulster Plantations," the name
appears spelled as Hanna and Hannah among those Protestants who went
to Northern Ireland and thereafter to America.
During Charles I's period of "government without
Parliament" (1629-1640), William Laud ruled church affairs,
causing all who would not support the Episcopal Church to be fined.
In Scotland, James Hannay was appointed Dean of St. Guiles in 1634
and was instructed to introduce Laud's Church Service Book. This
action sparked the famous Jenny Geddes Riot of 1637.
Here is how the riot scene was described in the "Annals of Edinburgh":
"The dean, arrayed in his surplice, had no sooner made his
appearance and opened the service book, than a tumult arose; and an
old woman named Janet Geddes started up and exclaimed, 'Out, out! Does
the false loon mean to say his black mass at my lug?' and then threw
her stool at the dean's head. This was the signal for a general
uproar."
Hannays attained the estates of Kingsmuir, Fife, about 1700; and a
representative of this family has commemorated the Jenny Geddes
incident by placing a plaque in St. Gules.
The plaque reads: "To James Hannay, D.D., Dean of This
Cathedral, 1634-1639. He was the first and the last who read the
Service Book in this Church."
Members of the Clan Hannay Society, active in Great Britain, North
America and Australia, are presently considering partial restoration
of Sorbie Castle as a rallying-point for clansmen from all parts of
the world.